Messiah SE, Vidot DC, Somarriba G, Haney K, Aytur S, Natale RA, Brosco JP, Arheart KL. Obesity and cardiometabolic disease risk factors among US adolescents with disabilities. World J Diabetes 2015; 6(1): 200-207 [PMID: 25685291 DOI: 10.4239/wjd.v6.i1.200]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Sarah E Messiah, PhD, MPH, Division of Pediatric Clinical Research, Department of Pediatrics, University of Miami, Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine, Batchelor Children’s Research Institute Room 541, NW 10th Avenue (D820), Miami, FL 33101, United States. smessiah@med.miami.edu
Research Domain of This Article
Health Care Sciences & Services
Article-Type of This Article
Retrospective Study
Open-Access Policy of This Article
This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
World J Diabetes. Feb 15, 2015; 6(1): 200-207 Published online Feb 15, 2015. doi: 10.4239/wjd.v6.i1.200
Table 1 Demographic and anthropometric characteristics of of those 12-18 years old with and without disabilities in the United States, 1999-2010 National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys n (%)
Table 2 Mean values of cardiometabolic disease risk factors among those 12-18 years old with and without disabilities in the United States by body mass index weight categorya, 1999-2010 National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys
Cardiometabolic disease risk factors
Disability mean (SE)
No disability mean (SE)
P-value
Waist circumference, cm
Normal weight
74.7 (0.61)
73.1 (0.18)
0.01
Overweight
96.5 (1.63)
94.7 (0.38)
0.31
Obese
105.1 (1.59)
102.2 (0.50)
0.10
Severely Obese
122.2 (3.30)
116.6 (0.71)
0.09
Systolic blood pressure, mmHg
Normal weight
106.7 (1.22)
107.3 (0.26)
0.61
Overweight
114.2 (1.46)
112.2 (0.36)
0.19
Obese
115.7 (1.85)
113.7 (0.38)
0.31
Severely Obese
120.9 (3.49)
116.2 (0.65)
0.18
Diastolic blood pressure, mmHg
Normal weight
60.8 (0.45)
61.2 (1.72)
0.82
Overweight
59.8 (0.59)
61.7 (1.45)
0.19
Obese
59.7 (0.67)
60.8 (2.17)
0.59
Severely obese
61.1 (1.46)
60.8 (3.75)
0.94
High density lipoprotein, mg/dL
Normal weight
50.3 (1.23)
52.9 (0.29)
0.05
Overweight
44.9 (1.66)
45.9 (0.37)
0.53
Obese
41.0 (2.10)
43.9 (0.45)
0.19
Severely Obese
37.2 (3.07)
41.1 (0.92)
0.24
Triglycerides, mg/dL
Normal weight
92.3 (10.77)
78.4 (1.14)
0.21
Overweight
105.4 (11.05)
100.3 (3.27)
0.63
Obese
115.9 (15.40)
113.2 (4.53)
0.85
Severely Obese
173.0 (23.62)
131.0 (12.76)
0.12
Glucose, mg/dL
Normal weight
92.8 (1.32)
92.4 (0.37)
0.80
Overweight
96.7 (1.16)
94.0 (0.35)
0.03
Obese
96.8 (1.59)
95.2 (0.47)
0.32
Severely Obese
94.5 (1.10)
95.9 (1.00)
0.39
Table 3 Prevalence of abnormal cardiometabolic disease risk factors among those who are overweight, obese and severely obese and 12-18 years old with and without disabilities in the United States compared to those of normal weighta, 1999-2010 National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys n (%)
Table 4 Odds Ratios to predict the metabolic syndrome by selected covariates among those 12-18 years old with and without disabilities in the United States, 1999-2010 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
OR (95%CI)
P-value
Disability status
No disability (ref)
1
-
Disability
3.45 (1.08-10.99)
0.03
Age
12 years old (ref)
1
-
> 12 years old
1.22 (1.03-1.44)
0.02
Sex
Male (ref)
1
-
Female
0.33 (0.21-0.53)
< 0.0001
Ethnicity
Non-Hispanic white (ref)
1
-
Race/Ethnicity
0.77 (0.59-1.00)
0.05
Education
< High School (ref)
Education level
1.01 (0.97-1.05)
0.70
Household income
> $75000
Household Income
1.02 (1.00-1.03)
0.05
Citation: Messiah SE, Vidot DC, Somarriba G, Haney K, Aytur S, Natale RA, Brosco JP, Arheart KL. Obesity and cardiometabolic disease risk factors among US adolescents with disabilities. World J Diabetes 2015; 6(1): 200-207